TOKYO โ U.S. stocks and the price of gold fell on Wednesday, as momentum on Wall Street reverses.
The S&P 500 sank 0.5%, though itโs still within 1% of its all-time high set earlier this month. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 334 points, or 0.7%, from its record set the day before, while the Nasdaq composite fell 0.9%.
Netflix helped drag the market lower after delivering a weaker profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. The pressure is on the video streamer and on companies broadly to deliver solid growth in profits. That would counter criticism that their stock prices shot too high following a 35% romp for the S&P 500 from a low in April.
Netflixโs stock came into the day with a jump of 39.3% for the year so far, more than double the S&P 500โs gain, before it dropped 10.1% on Wednesday.
AT&T fell 1.9% after delivering a profit that only matched analystsโ expectations, while Texas Instruments sank 5.6% after its profit fell just short of forecasts.
On the winning side of Wall Street was Intuitive Surgical, which sells robotic-assisted surgical systems. It jumped 13.9% after reporting better profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. Boston Scientific climbed 4% after likewise topping analystsโ profit expectations.
Capital One Financial rose 1.5%, and Western Alliance Bancorp climbed 3.2% following their own profit updates that beat analystsโ expectations. The report from Western Alliance was particularly welcome after it helped shake confidence in the industry last week. Itโs one of several banks that had warned of potentially bad loans on its books, possibly because of fraud.
Beyond Meat, meanwhile, swung sharply through a manic Wednesday. After surging as much as 112% in the morning, its stock erased all of that to finish with a drop of 1.1%. Itโs still up 454.5% for the week so far in the midst of its meme-stock run.
The maker of plant-based meat alternatives was the biggest holding in the Roundhill Meme Stock exchange-traded fund, as of Tuesday. The ETF holds stocks where investors have piled in because theyโre hoping to catch a wave of momentum, almost regardless of how or even what the businesses themselves are doing.
All told, the S&P 500 fell 35.95 points to 6,699.40. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 334.33 to 46,590.41, and the Nasdaq composite sank 213.27 to 22,740.40.
Momentum continued to head the other way for gold, which fell 1.1% to $4,065.40 per ounce. Thatโs after Tuesdayโs 5.3% slide knocked it off its record high.
Many of the same factors that drew buyers to gold this year are still there. The expectation along Wall Street is still for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates through next year. Concerns are growing about inflation remaining high. And the worrisome mountains of debt that the U.S. and other governments worldwide have amassed are only rising further.
But no investmentโs price goes up forever, and criticism had been growing that goldโs price had gone too far, too fast after it shot up even more than the U.S. stock market. Goldโs price is still up 56% for the year so far.
In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed across Europe and Asia.
Londonโs FTSE 100 added 0.9% after a report on U.K. inflation raised hopes for another cut to interest rates next month. South Koreaโs Kospi jumped 1.6% for another one of the worldโs bigger gains. But indexes fell 0.9% in Hong Kong and 0.6% in Paris.
In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury eased to 3.95% from 3.98% late Tuesday.
___
AP Business Writers Yuri Kageyama and Matt Ott contributed.
